Notes on Contributors

Thomas Brodie is Departmental Lecturer in Modern History at Jesus College, Oxford and works on the social and cultural histories of during the twentieth century. He is particularly interested in the Second World War and its aftermaths, as well as religion as a theme. He completed his doctoral dissertation, For Christ and Germany: German Catholicism and the Second World War, at the University of Oxford in 2014 and is presently revising this thesis for publication as part of the Oxford Historical Monographs series. The archival research for this article was facilitated by extensive stays in Germany in 2011 and 2013/14, funded by the Arts and Humanities Research Council and a Hanseatic Scholarship generously provided by the Alfred Toepfer Foundation.

Malgorzata Fidelis is Associate Professor in the Department of History at the University of Ilinois at Chicago. Her research focuses on social and cultural history in post-1945 Eastern Europe. Her first book, Women, Communism, and Industrialization in Postwar Poland (Cambridge University Press, 2010), explores how communist leaders and society reconciled pre-communist traditions with radically new norms imposed by the communist ideology. The Polish translation of the book was published in 2015. Fidelis’ new book manuscript, tentatively titled The Sixties behind the Iron Curtain: Youth and the Global Sixties in Poland, 1954–1974, examines the interaction between young people in Poland and transnational developments during the Global Sixties, ranging from popular culture and counterculture to protest movements and anti- colonial revolutions. Fidelis has also been working on a college textbook on Eastern Europe: Peoples, Cultures, and Politics from the Middle Ages to the Twenty-First Century, co-authored with Jill Massino (forthcoming from Routledge, 2017).

Jesse Kauffman is Associate Professor at Eastern Michigan University. He obtained his BA from UCLA and his PhD from Stanford. His first book is Elusive Alliance: The German Occupation of Poland in (Harvard, 2015).

Vladimir Kulic´ is Associate Professor at the Florida School of Architecture. He specialises in architecture after the Second World War, modernism in Central and

Contemporary European History, 26, 3 (2017), pp. 573–575. c Cambridge University Press 2017

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Eastern Europe, the global exchanges of architectural culture and contemporary criticism. He is the author of Modernism In-Between: The Mediatory Architectures of Socialist Yugoslavia (with Marjore Mrduljaš and Wolfgang Thaler, 2012) and of numerous articles on architecture in the former Yugoslavia. He is also the editor of Unfinished Modernisations: Between Utopia and Pragmatism (with Maroje Mrduljaš, 2012) and of Sanctioning Modernism: Architecture and the Making of Postwar Identities (with Monica Penick and Timothy Parker). The exhibitions he co-curated have been shown at the ArchitekturzentrumWien in Vienna, Swiss Museum of Architecture in Basel, Museum of Yugoslav History in Belgrade and Museum of Architecture and Design in Ljubljana.

Sara Lorenzini is Associate Professor of Contemporary History at the School of International Studies, University of Trento. She is currently working on a book project on the history of development aid during the Cold War. Recent publications include: ‘Ecologia a parole? L’Italia, l’ambientalismo globale e il rapporto ambiente- sviluppo intorno alla conferenza di Stoccolma’, in Contemporanea, 3 (July-Sept. 2016); ‘Comecon and the South in the Years of Détente: A Study on East-South Economic Relations’, in CERH European Review of History: Revue europeenne d’histoire, 2,(2014); ‘Sviluppo e strategie di guerra fredda: il contagio difficile’ in Storica, 53,(2012)and ‘Globalising Ostpolitik’, in Cold War History, 9, 2 (May 2009). Her books include: L’Italia e il trattato di pace del 1947 (Bologna, 2007)andDue Germanie in Africa. La cooperazione allo sviluppo e la competizione per i mercati di materie prime e tecnologie (Firenze, 2003).

Anton Masterovoy is Adjunct Assistant Professor of History at the City College of New York and the Cooper Union. He defended his dissertation, ‘Eating Soviet: Food and Culture in USSR, 1917–1991’in2013 at the Graduate Center of the City University of New York. He is currently working on a chapter on the Soviet attempts to manipulate the sense of taste and smell to fit with the current needs of the state. His research interests include Soviet and European cultural and food history.

Pedro Aires Oliveira is Assistant Professor at the NOVA University in Lisbon and an integrated researcher at the Institute of Contemporary History and, since December 2015, its director. His PhD thesis (2007), Os Despojos da Aliança. A Grã- Bretanha e a Questão Colonial Portuguesa 1945–1975, examined Britain’s political and diplomatic involvement in the final stages of ’s imperial crisis, winning the Mário Soares prize for Contemporary History. He has published a number of books and articles in scholarly journals on topics related to Portuguese foreign and imperial policies and the history of the Estado Novo (including ‘Generous Albion. Portuguese anti-Salazarists in the United Kingdom, c. 1960–74’, Portuguese Studies, 27, 2 (2011).

Javier Rodrigo obtained his PhD in History from European University Institute and is Associate Professor at the Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, . His main research interests are violence, civil wars and fascism. He is the director of

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the Seminario Interuniversitario de Investigadores del Fascismo (SIdIF). His books include Políticas de la violencia. Europa, siglo XX (Zaragoza, 2014)andLa guerra fascista. Italia en la Guerra Civil española (1936-1939) (Madrid, 2016), a history of the military, diplomatic and political Italian intervention in the Spanish Civil War. In 2017 he will publish in Mexico and Spain Una historia de violencia. Historiografías del terror en la Europa del siglo XX.

Nigel Swain is Lecturer in Eastern Europe in the Twentieth Century at the University of Liverpool. He graduated in Social and Political Sciences at the University of Cambridge in 1973. His PhD, also from Cambridge, examined the social and economic forces underlying Hungary’s relatively successful collectivisation of agriculture. In the 1980s he worked outside the academic sector as a computer programmer and systems analyst, but returned to university life after the Berlin Wall was breached. His numerous publications include, most recently, ‘Eastern European Rurality in a Neo-Liberal, World’, Sociologia Ruralis, 56, 4 and ‘Party Politics, Political Competition and Coming to Terms with the Past in Post- Communist Hungary’, Europe-Asia Studies, 67, 9.

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Leeds, West Yorkshire, LS2 9JT Submissions Dr Jessica Reinisch, Department of History, Classics and Archaeology, Birkbeck, Authors wishing to submit articles for publication should do so through the journal’s online University of London, Room G10, 28 Russell Square, London WC1B 5DQ, UK submissions system at http://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/conteurohistory. corresponding editor for north america Articles should normally be about 8,000 words long, the total to include footnotes. Review Professor Dominique Reill, University of Miami, Department of History, P.O. Box 248107, Coral articles should not exceed 5,000 words. Gables, FL 33124-4662 The journal is published in English, and contributions are normally submitted in that language; review editors however, we will also consider articles submitted in other major European languages. If accepted Dr Jessica Wardhaugh, Department of French Studies, for publication, these will be translated. All articles, including those commissioned, will be University of Warwick, Coventry, CV4 7AL refereed. Dr Celia Donert, Department of History, University of Liverpool, An abstract of each article is published in English, French and German. 8-14 Abercromby Square, Liverpool, L69 7WZ Submission of a paper will be taken to imply that it is unpublished and is not being considered Professor Emily Greble, Department of German, Russian and East European Studies, Vanderbilt for publication elsewhere. On acceptance of a paper, the author will be asked to assign copyright University, VU Station B #3515672301 Vanderbilt Place, Nashville, TN 37235-1567 (on certain conditions) to Cambridge University Press. An article cannot be published unless a managing editor signed copyright form is returned promptly. 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Holly Case, Cornell University Katherine Lebow, University of Oxford Patricia Clavin, University of Oxford Kiran Patel, University of Maastricht Prospective authors should refer to the full set of Instruction for Contributors by fol- Martin Conway, University of Oxford Andrea Petõ, Central European University, lowing the link at https://www.cambridge.org/ceh John Connelly, University of California, Budapest Berkeley Helge Pharo, University of Oslo Contributors of accepted papers will be expected to submit a final version which should include Mark Cornwall, University of Southampton Davide Rodogno, Graduate Institute, Geneva 1. the text, which should begin with the title, the author’s name and email and postal address, and Anne Deighton, University of Oxford Glenda Sluga, University of Sydney the author’s affiliation as he/she should wish it to appear David Edgerton, Imperial College, London Mary Vincent, University of Sheffield 2. a 100-word summary of the article in English, French or German 3. a short title for use as a running page-head © Cambridge University Press 2017 4. a statement of the article’s length in number of words (including both text and footnotes), Subscriptions Contemporary European History (ISSN 0960-7773) is published four times a year and a list of tables, graphs, maps and any other illustrative material (each of which should be in February, May, August and November by Cambridge, University Press, The Edinburgh Building, supplied as a separate file) Shaftesbury Road, Cambridge, CB2 8RU, UK/Cambridge University Press, 1 Liberty Plaza, New 5. a short biographical note with a description of work in progress and previously published York, NY 10006, . 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contemporary european history 26:3 August

Vol 26:3 August 2017 ISSN 0960-7773 2017 2017

August Contents

26:3

Vol 421 Between ‘National Community’ and ‘Milieu’: German Catholics at War, 1939–1945 Thomas Brodie contemporary 441 Ace in the Hole or Hole in the Pocket? The Italian Mezzogiorno and the Story of a Troubled Transition from Development Model to Development Donor Sara Lorenzini contemporary 465 A Sense of Hopelessness? Portuguese Oppositionists Abroad in the Final Years of the Estado Novo, 1968–1974 Pedro Aires Oliveira european 487 Under the Sign of Mars: Violence in European Civil Wars, 1917–1949 Javier Rodrigo

Review articles history european 507 Introduction: New Scholarship on Central and Eastern Europe history Celia Donert, Emily Greble and Jessica Wardhaugh 509 The Unquiet Eastern Front: New Work on the Great War Jesse Kauffman 523 What Was Socialist Food and What Comes Next? Anton Masterovoy 533 Pleasures and Perils of Socialist Modernity: New Scholarship on Post-War Eastern Europe Malgorzata Fidelis 545 The Builders of Socialism: Eastern Europe’s Cities in Recent Historiography Vladimir Kulic´ 561 Urban and Industrial Everyday Life under Socialism and Post-Socialism Nigel Swain 573 Notes on Contributors

Cambridge University Press

Cambridge Core For further information about this journal please go to the journal website at: www.cambridge.org/ceh

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